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Transients
They are ashamed who leave so soonThe Inn of Grief--who thought to stayThrough many a faithful sun and moon,Yet tarry but a day.Shame-faced I watch them pay the score,Then straight with eager footsteps pressWhere waits beyond its rose-wreathed doorThe Inn of Happiness.I wish I did not know that here,Here too--where they have dreamed to staySo many and many a golden yearThey lodge but for a day.
Theodosia Garrison
Dedicatory Poem.
Dear Carrie, were we truly wise,And could discern with finer eyes,And half-inspired sense,The ways of Providence:Could we but know the hidden thingsThat brood beneath the Future's wings,Hermetically sealed,But soon to be revealed:Would we, more blest than we are now,In due submission learn to bow, -Receiving on our kneesThe Omnipotent decrees?That which is just, we have. And weWho lead this round of mystery,This dance of strange unrest,What are we at the best? -Unless we learn to mount and climb;Writing upon the page of time,In words of joy or pain,That we've not lived in vain.We all are Ministers of Good;And where our mission's understood,How many hearts we mustRaise, t...
Charles Sangster
Hymn to the Saviour.
Saviour! pure source of life and zeal intense,Whose words were peace, whose deeds benificence,Around thy servant ever may I seeThe sunshine of the soul deriv'd from Thee.While their true faith enlighten'd Christians prove,By mutual aid, and evangelic love,By sins environ'd, may we strive aloneTo pardon others, and repent our own.So may we, comforted by words from Heaven,That clearly prove the penitent forgiven,With trust beyond the confidence of youth,Rest on our guardian God--the God of Truth!
William Hayley
The Playmate
She is not Folly, that I know.Her steadfast eyelids tell me soWhen, at the hour the lights divide,She steals as summonsed to my side.When, finger on the pursed lipIn secret, mirthful fellowship,She, heralding new framed delights,Breathes, "This shall be a Night of Nights!"Then, out of Time and out of Space,Is built an Hour and a PlaceWhere all an earnest, baffled EarthBlunders and trips to make us mirth;Whence from the trivial flux of Things,Rise inconceived miscarryings,Outrageous but immortal, shown,Of Her great love, to me alone....She is not Wisdom, but, maybe,Wiser than all the Norns is She:And more than Wisdom I preferTo wait on Her, to wait on Her!
Rudyard
A Will To Be Working.
Although we cannot turn the fervent fitOf sin, we must strive 'gainst the stream of it;And howsoe'er we have the conquest miss'd,'Tis for our glory that we did resist.
Robert Herrick
Chance Upon
As she's lying there in sherbet panties looking somewhat disaffected, a nez perce expression bordered by sleep, think of the Sultan's regalia his entourage of kings chance upon dark laughter from Saladein's[1] concubines, Nell's[2] white turn of the knee or the pretty bosom of a Confederate officer's belle . . . all satin & lace ... perhaps, again, the splendid neck of Titian's choicest nude. To further turn the phrase, ponder a basket of fruit - the sexual omnipotence of its texture a dreamy sensuality thickened by red Emperor grapes ripened against the elongated nails of a Pompadour's[3] milk white hand. [1] Richard the Lion Hearted's adversary [2] ...
Paul Cameron Brown
Gadara, A.D. 31
Rabbi, begone! Thy powersBring loss to us and ours.Our ways are not as Thine.Thou lovest men, we--swine.Oh, get you hence, Omnipotence,And take this fool of Thine!His soul? What care we for his soul?What good to us that Thou hast made him whole,Since we have lost our swine?And Christ went sadly.He had wrought for them a signOf Love, and Hope, and Tenderness divine;They wanted--swine.Christ stands without your door and gently knocks;But if your gold, or swine, the entrance blocks,He forces no man's hold--he will depart,And leave you to the treasures of your heart.No cumbered chamber will the Master share,But one swept bareBy cleansing fires, then plenished fresh and fairWith meekness, and humility, and ...
William Arthur Dunkerley (John Oxenham)
The Corn-Song
Heap high the farmers wintry hoard!Heap high the golden corn!No richer gift has Autumn pouredFrom out her lavish horn!Let other lands, exulting, gleanThe apple from the pine,The orange from its glossy green,The cluster from the vine;We better love the hardy giftOur rugged vales bestow,To cheer us when the storm shall driftOur harvest-fields with snow.Through vales of grass and meads of flowersOur ploughs their furrows made,While on the hills the sun and showersOf changeful April played.We dropped the seed oer hill and plainBeneath the sun of May,And frightened from our sprouting grainThe robber crows away.All through the long, bright days of JuneIts leaves grew green and fair,A...
John Greenleaf Whittier
To H.A.B. on My Forty-Seventh Birthday
When one is forty years and seven,Is seven and forty sad years old,He looks not onward for his Heaven,The future is too blank and cold,Its pale flowers smell of graveyard mould;He looks back to his lifeful past;If age is silver, youth is gold:-Could youth but last, could youth but last!He turns back toward his youthful pastA-throb with life and love and hope,Whose long-dead joys in memory last,Whose shining days had ample scope;He turns and lingers on the slopeWhose dusk leads down to sightless death:-The sun once crowned that darkening cope,And song once thrilled this weary breath.Ali, he plods wearily to death,Adown the gloaming into night,But other lives breathe joyous breathIn morning's boundless golden light;<...
James Thomson
The Spirit Of Discovery By Sea: Analysis.
Book The First.The book opens with the resting of the Ark on the mountains of the great Indian Caucasus, considered by many authors as Ararat: the present state of the inhabited world, contrasted with its melancholy appearance immediately after the flood. The poem returns to the situation of our forefathers on leaving the ark; beautiful evening described. The Angel of Destruction appears to Noah in a dream, and informs him that although he and his family alone have escaped, the VERY ARK, which was the means of his present preservation, shall be the cause of the future triumph of Destruction.In his dream, the evils in consequence of the discovery of America, the slave-trade, et cet., are set before him. Noah, waking from disturbed sleep, ascends the summit of Caucasus. An angel appears to him; te...
William Lisle Bowles
Sir Walter Raleigh.
Whether in velvet white, slashed, and be-pearled,And rich in knots of clustering gems a-glow:Or, in his rusted armor, he unfurledSt. George's Cross by Oronoko's flow;He was a man to note right well as oneWho shot his arrows straightway at the sun.Dark was his hair, his beard all crisp and curled.And narrow-lidded were his piercing eyes,Anhungered in their glances for a worldThat he might win by daring enterprise, -Explorer, soldier, scholar, poet, heNot only wrote but acted historie! -And that great Captain, of our Saxon stock,Took his last slumber on the ghastly block!
James Barron Hope
Sonnet CLXX.
Lasso, ch' i' ardo, ed altri non mel crede!POSTERITY WILL ACCORD TO HIM THE PITY WHICH LAURA REFUSES. Alas, with ardour past belief I glow!None doubt this truth, except one only fair,Who all excels, for whom alone I care;She plainly sees, yet disbelieves my woe.O rich in charms, but poor in faith! canst thouLook in these eyes, nor read my whole heart there?Were I not fated by my baleful star,For me from pity's fount might favour flow.My flame, of which thou tak'st so little heed,And thy high praises pour'd through all my song,O'er many a breast may future influence spread:These, my sweet fair, so warns prophetic thought,Closed thy bright eye, and mute thy poet's tongue,E'en after death shall still with sparks be fraught.
Francesco Petrarca
The Beggar.
Shall I a daily beggar be,For love's sake asking alms of thee?Still shall I crave, and never getA hope of my desired bit?Ah, cruel maids! I'll go my way,Whereas, perchance, my fortunes mayFind out a threshold or a doorThat may far sooner speed the poor:Where thrice we knock, and none will hear,Cold comfort still I'm sure lives there.
The Coming Era
They tell us that the Muse is soon to fly hence,Leaving the bowers of song that once were dear,Her robes bequeathing to her sister, Science,The groves of Pindus for the axe to clear.Optics will claim the wandering eye of fancy,Physics will grasp imagination's wings,Plain fact exorcise fiction's necromancy,The workshop hammer where the minstrel sings,No more with laugher at Thalia's frolicsOur eyes shall twinkle till the tears run down,But in her place the lecturer on hydraulicsSpout forth his watery science to the town.No more our foolish passions and affectionsThe tragic Muse with mimic grief shall try,But, nobler far, a course of vivisectionsTeach what it costs a tortured brute to die.The unearthed monad, long in burie...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
To The Right Honourable Francis Earl Of Huntington
IThe wise and great of every clime,Through all the spacious walks of Time,Where'er the Muse her power display'd,With joy have listen'd and obey'd.For taught of heaven, the sacred NinePersuasive numbers, forms divine,To mortal sense impart:They best the soul with glory fire;They noblest counsels, boldest deeds inspire;And high o'er Fortune's rage inthrone the fixed heart.Nor less prevailing is their charmThe vengeful bosom to disarm;To melt the proud with human woe,And prompt unwilling tears to flow.Can wealth a power like this afford?Can Cromwell's arts, or Marlborough's sword,An equal empire claim?No, Hastings. Thou my words wilt own:Thy breast the gifts of every Muse hath known;Nor shall the giv...
Mark Akenside
Paean
Now, joy and thanks forevermore!The dreary night has wellnigh passed,The slumbers of the North are o'er,The Giant stands erect at last!More than we hoped in that dark timeWhen, faint with watching, few and worn,We saw no welcome day-star climbThe cold gray pathway of the morn!O weary hours! O night of years!What storms our darkling pathway swept,Where, beating back our thronging fears,By Faith alone our march we kept.How jeered the scoffing crowd behind,How mocked before the tyrant train,As, one by one, the true and kindFell fainting in our path of pain!They died, their brave hearts breaking slow,But, self-forgetful to the last,In words of cheer and bugle blowTheir breath upon the darkness passed.A mighty host, on either...
I Would I Were A Child.
I would I were a child,That I might look, and laugh, and say, My Father!And follow Thee with running feet, or rather Be led thus through the wild. How I would hold thy hand!My glad eyes often to thy glory lifting,Which casts all beauteous shadows, ever shifting, Over this sea and land. If a dark thing came near,I would but creep within thy mantle's folding,Shut my eyes close, thy hand yet faster holding, And so forget my fear. O soul, O soul, rejoice!Thou art God's child indeed, for all thy sinning;A trembling child, yet his, and worth the winning With gentle eyes and voice. The words like echoes flow.They are too good; mine I can call them never;Such water drinking once, I should ...
George MacDonald
Jessie.
You miss the touch of her dear hand, Her laughter gay and sweet, The dimpled cheek, the sunny smile, The patter of her feet. The loving glances she bestowed, The tender tales she told - The world, since she has gone away, Seems empty, drear and cold. Dear, oft you prayed that God would give Your darling joy and grace, That pain or loss might never dim The brightness of her face. That her young heart might keep its trust, Its purity so white, Its wealth of sweet unselfishness, Her eyes their radiant light, Her fair, soft face its innocence Of every guile and wrong, And nothing touch to mar the joy And gladness of her song. God he...
Jean Blewett